Showing posts with label Expecting Easter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Expecting Easter. Show all posts

Friday

"Rockin'" Resurrection Party

On Easter Sunday,
we had a lot to celebrate
in Children's Church!
The sins we had buried in our
were gone!

Just like on that first Easter
years ago,
the tomb was
EMPTY!

Jesus was ALIVE!!!

***

Since we had a lot to celebrate,
we had a party
in Children's Church...
(The kiddos were pretty excited as they arrived,
can ya tell?)

I decorated our Fellowship Hall
with some simple table clothes...
...balloons, the Resurrection Cake and
Hill of Calvary Garden.

***

To kick off the party...
 ...we played the "Right-Left" game.

All of the kiddos sat in a big circle
and were each given an Easter Egg
with a prize inside.

I also put into the mix two "special" eggs
that were empty and decorated with Washi tape-
those eggs had special prizes attached to them.

When the kiddos were ready,
I read a part of the Easter story
I summarized from
and

In my summery,
I used the words
"left" and "right" often.
Whenever I said the word "left,"
the kiddos had to pass their egg to the left.

When I said the word "right,"
they had to pass their egg to the right.

The kiddos then got to keep
whatever egg they ended up with
at the end of the story.

The Washi tape egg holders received
either a chocolate cross or

(You can download a copy
of the game for your own use
by clicking HERE.)

***

After the game,
I had the kiddos sit at the tables
and I reviewed the story
and pointed out the empty tomb in
our Hill of Calvary garden.

Then I showed them the...
...Empty Tomb cake.
Oh how the woman at the tomb must have felt!
Scared, confused, sad, excited-
all at the same time!

After we reviewed the story,
it was time to have some of that cake!

I got the idea for this cake over at
I used Devils Food cake mix
(hee! hee!)
and chocolate icing for the cake,
both from Duncan Hines,
since their mixes are peanut allergy free.
I decorated the cake using figures from
THIS Oriental Trading Company Resurrection set.

I also had sheet cakes in the back to serve to the kiddos
so there was PLENTY to go around!

***

We ended our party by making
a Prayer Rock craft,
to remind us that the stone has been rolled away
from the tomb!
I found THIS free printable
Prayer Rock Poem
to hand out to each of the kiddos.

Instead of painting a rock,
like I have seen most of them done...
 ...we used Washi tape to decorate the stones.
I did NOT want to chance the kiddos
spilling paint
all over their new Easter clothes-
plus Washi tape is just so fun and colorful!

***

As the kiddos left Children's Church
to go and celebrate Easter in "big" church
 with their families,
I had a little party favor to give to them...
...Rolos!

(Love THIS free printable from the
Happy Home Fairy!)

***

We celebrate...
...for He has risen!
Yes-
He has risen indeed!!!

Wednesday

Planning a Simple and Purposeful Community Resurrection Easter Egg Hunt

The weekend before Easter weekend...
...I donned my best Easter Bunny eggs
in preparation for our church's
Community Easter Egg Hunt.

God blessed us with beautiful weather
and a nice little crowd of egg hunting experts.

But in order for an event like this to have
any kind of impact on the community,
there had to be some organization, thought, and prayer
put into it.

Here are some of things I have learned when planning
and event like this one.

***

1.  Have Pre-Event Activities Planned

Our egg hunt was scheduled to start around 10am.

To keep early arrivers entertained
while we waited until about 10:10am to start...
...we had table of simple activities
for the kiddos and their families to participate in.
Our church Preschool Coordinator
had set out three jars with different
Easter candies in them.

The kiddos could each guess
how many pieces were in a jar,
and then place their guesses
in the basket behind the jar.

Later,
the papers were tallied,
and the closet guessers won the jars.
There were also lots of coloring pages
on the table for the kiddos to work on while they waited.

We copied them from a book similar to
 THIS Resurrection Eggs resource book.

***

2.  Gather Up Some Good-Humored Volunteers

My husband...
...is pictured above as
the "Easter Bunny."

He assisted me in the event planning,
not only by leading the kiddos to the hunt site...
...but also by stuffing and hiding countless eggs.

This lovely Mama
lead the craft at our event.

And there were others-
many others.

Others who planned, stuffed, set up, cleaned up,
took pictures, prayed, handed out flyers-
you get the picture.

An event like this CANNOT be put on by one
individual!

***

3.  Ask for Lots and Lots of Candy Donations
Here is what our preschool playground looked like
before the hunt-
it was littered with about 500 eggs.

If our congregation had not stepped up
with candy and prize donations,
this hunt would not have been nearly as fun
for the kiddos!

Now,
our congregation is generous,
but forgetful.

I had to have the help of one of our tech guys
to put together a little candy donations promo video
which was shown two weeks before the hunt.

After it played,
the candy donations came pouring in!

(Ask and you will receive, right?)  ;0)
Our preschool coordinator also donated some
lovely little stuffed animals and books
for bigger prizes.

Again,
if lots of people chip in,
and event like this does NOT have to break
the Children's Ministry budget!

***

4.  Designate Different Egg Hunting Sites
for Different Age Groups
We had a little over 1,000 eggs to be found,
so half of them were hidden on the preschool playground
for Nursery-Preschool
and the other half were hidden for K-5th grade students
behind the Youth House.

This keeps injuries from happening,
and enables ALL kiddos to have a chance at finding eggs.

***

5. Schedule the Creative Chaos
Here is a picture of the kiddos opening their eggs
after the hunt.

But this noisy fun
was all one the "schedule"
for the day...


An event like this CANNOT be planned to the second,
but it can have a schedule.

Here is what ours ended up looking like:

9:45 am-10:05 am
People arrive and work oat the coloring table.

10:05 am-10:20 am
Directions for the hunt are given,
kiddos are led to the hunt site, and the hunt occurs.

10:25 am-10:35 am
Kiddos open their eggs, collect their loot,
and put the empty eggs into the storage box.

10:35 am-10:55 am
Snack and story time

10:55 am until the end  
Craft and Photo Booth time

***

6.  Use the Snack as Part of the Story
Kiddos need to be fed,
so I took this time as an opportunity
to reinforce the
Resurrection Eggs lesson.

The kiddos and their families all got to come up
and make their own mini-bag of
Resurrection Trail Mix.

Each of the ingredients for the mix
symbolized a part
of the Easter story.

You can get the "recipe,"
(along with the scriptures and Resurrection Egg items),
for this trail mix by clicking

***

7.  Have the Kiddos Participate in the Story

The lesson I did with the kiddos
was the Resurrections Eggs.

To include the kiddos
in this lesson,
we hide 12 special eggs that had
numbers in them instead of candy.
I would call the kiddos up
who had a certain number...
...and have them open up the corresponding
Resurrection Egg.

The kiddo would tell everyone
what was in the egg
and then go a claim a prize off of the prize table
while I explained the item further.

***

8.  Have a Simple Craft for All Ages
This can be a challenge.

But our craft guru came up with a simple
activity that all ages could do
(even if the littles required some assistance).
They made simple
...out of clear contact paper and tissue paper.

***

9.  Bring on the Fun With a Photo Booth
We were very blessed to have a pretty fabulous
amateur photographer
come and take pictures at the event.

(All of the photos in this blog post are from her,
in case you are in need of a photographer
for your next event!) 
To set up the photo booth,
we strung a white shower curtain
on our entry coat rack
and added a string of Easter eggs.
I then purchased several fun items
from The Dollar Tree,
like bunny glasses, hats, and garland
for the kiddos to dress up in
during their pictures.





The pictures were bunny-tastic,
if you ask me!

To gain access to the pictures,
I created an event Facebook page.

I passed out the information in a flyer
at the photo booth table
so that visitors could pick
the pictures they like and print them at home
if they so desired.

Our photographer also linked up a
Walgreens photo page for families
to print pictures off of.

***

There ya have it!

My tips for a simple and purposeful
community Resurrection Easter Egg Hunt.

If you all have any tips
that help with the planning of an event like this,
feel free to mention them in the comments section below!

Friday

Expecting Easter: Sounds of the Crucifixion

Matthew 27:45-54

45 From noon until three in the afternoon darkness came over all the land.
46 About three in the afternoon Jesus cried out in a loud voice,
“Eli, Eli, lema sabachthani?”
(which means “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”).

47 When some of those standing there heard this,
they said, “He’s calling Elijah.”

48 Immediately one of them ran and got a sponge.
He filled it with wine vinegar, put it on a staff, and offered it to Jesus to drink.

49 The rest said, “Now leave him alone.
Let’s see if Elijah comes to save him.”

50 And when Jesus had cried out again in a loud voice,
he gave up his spirit.

51 At that moment the curtain of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom.
The earth shook, the rocks split 52 and the tombs broke open.
The bodies of many holy people who had died were raised to life.
53 They came out of the tombs after Jesus’ resurrection
and went into the holy city and appeared to many people.

54 When the centurion and those with him
who were guarding Jesus saw the earthquake and all that had happened,
they were terrified, and exclaimed,
“Surely he was the Son of God!”

***

There are so many dramatic sounds
that surround the death
of our Savior.

After reading the Bible passage above
with the kiddos,
we made maracas,
per the instructions from our
A Sense of the Resurrection
lesson for the day.


 (Don't ask- she is in her goofball phase...)

We made the maracas
so that every time we played them
we would be reminded 
of the sounds surrounding
Jesus' death...
Make a joyful noise, right?

:0)

***

On Good Friday,
we continued to dwell on Jesus' death
by reading about his burial:

Matthew 27: 57-61

57 As evening approached, there came a rich man from Arimathea,
named Joseph, who had himself become a disciple of Jesus.
58 Going to Pilate, he asked for Jesus’ body,
and Pilate ordered that it be given to him.
59 Joseph took the body, wrapped it in a clean linen cloth,
60 and placed it in his own new tomb that he had cut out of the rock.
He rolled a big stone in front of the entrance to the tomb
and went away.
61 Mary Magdalene and the other Mary
were sitting there opposite the tomb.

To honor Jesus' burial,
we made ourselves a little snack
inspired by Catholic Icing's
Using graham crackers as the base...
...the kiddos covered them with
green icing.

Next...
...the kiddos cut a small section
off of the bottom of a chocolate covered
doughnut...
...and placed it on the icing.

Finally,
using a mini Oreo...
...the kiddos sealed their "tombs" shut.

A simple sweet reminder
of bigger events to come...

***